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Ed,On the one hand, you signed it. You made an agreement with your eyes wide open. They fulfilled their end of the bargain; why do you want to renege on your end? How are you going to explain not fulfilling your contract at your next interview.. and the one after that?
If you must, ultimately you need a lawyer. An agressive lawyer. A lawyer who would argue that a stop sign is unconstitutional. Find a good, agressive lawyer who specializes in contracts. But as I said, I think it will say more about your character if you tough it out. How much longer do you have, and how bad is it, exactly?
On the one hand, you signed it. You made an agreement with your eyes wide open. They fulfilled their end of the bargain; why do you want to renege on your end? How are you going to explain not fulfilling your contract at your next interview.. and the one after that?
If you must, ultimately you need a lawyer. An agressive lawyer. A lawyer who would argue that a stop sign is unconstitutional. Find a good, agressive lawyer who specializes in contracts. But as I said, I think it will say more about your character if you tough it out. How much longer do you have, and how bad is it, exactly?
These training contracts.... Too bad it does not protect the pilots from being furloughed before the 2 yrs are up.
There have even been companies brash enough to go after pilots for training contracts after they took another job while furloughed.
Integrity? Simply an unfair labor practice. Training is a cost of doing business.
To answer you Hammer, if "taking care of your family" is a valid excuse for your actions, then crossing a picket line would be cool too. After all, a scab just wants to put bread on the table, also. Ditto for drug dealers, burgulars, and child-porn producers. Care to defend any of that?
This guy expressed no desperation to take care of his family, only a desire to "get out of" his agreement. (See title of thread.) If I were a future employer, I'd be worried that he suddenly develop the need to "take care of his family" after I trained him. That's why I advised him to stick it out if at all possible.
But even as a regular line pilot, I say that it's only because of actions like that -- bailing on employers after training -- that we have these %#X@ contracts in the first place. He signed it. Unless there's a breach by the employer, he should either do his time or pay it off like the rest of us.
Johnsonrod-
People are getting "stuck" in the regionals now and realizing it is no place for a career. Most of the career opportunities have dried up- honestly. FDX, SWA, UPS are about the only major type airlines IMO. I am sure many will disagree. I am at NetJets now and I can tell you that this is truely a career place as opposed to a stepping stone that RAH is. I have many, many good freinds at RAH who are considering a move to NJ or elsewhere now. A lot of us came from ACA originally. ACA was a fairly decent regional, but still no career place. All the questions come into play about job stability and career options, etc. While RAH may be growing like a weed (and they surely are), they are experiencing TREMENDOUS growing pains along with that growth. Unfortunately, because of the nature of regional business (low bidder wins essentially), those growing pains get burdened onto the employees almost 100%. This is a very detailed discussion, but that is the basic issue.
As for me, I will never leave NJ on my own will- not even for SWA, FDX, or UPS. The job stabilty is too great and the intangibles of being part of a GOOD company are way to enormous to ever leave. Pay will be fair for a career pilot IMO. Probably average in the mid 100,000's over a 30 yr career all things being equal. I know everything i subject to change, and NOTHING is EVER a sure bet- I have been in the regionals for 5 years prior to my move to NJ, working for 3 different companies, flying 2 different planes. I guess my bottom line opinion is that if NJ doesn't work out to be a solid career then nothing in aviation will. All jobs are subject to unforeseen issues, but after examining many, many possibilities of the airlines, regionals, and NJ, this is truely the most protected aviation job around. Just one guys opinion. You really just have to experience it all for yourself to be a believer. And it's not in company promises- the positive intangibles speak for themselves here. Actins truely are louder than words.
-DK
PS- regarding the 170 being a nice aircraft- yeah, it's not bad. It is a cheap low-budge, big airplane. But, it was fun. After a few years in the regionals, starting to plan life out, I realized that the type of airplane doesn't matter to me at all. It's all about QOL, pay and job security. I went from the CRj to the 170 to the Citation XL. I am flying the smallest plane of my career, having the most fun flying ever. I always had the dream of flying the big 747 ----- then life happened. ;o)
Just send them a letter telling them that times are hard and you are losing money and that you need concessions. And that they need to give a little. And not to worry you will get hook them up in the future.
They do it so why not give it a shot.
Seriously though, walk away. Acutally, RUN.